Wednesday, March 28, 2007

145)Audio speech by as well as timeless sayings of Aga Khan III, combo delight.

This excerpt of an audio speech(see below) made by our 48th Imam, Mowlana Sultan Mohammed Shah, was posted recently on the Ismaili Mail website(see my suggested links section to check out this remarkable website). After listening to the voice of our 48th Imam, I made the following comment on Ismaili Mail:

"What a powerful speech by our 48th Imam, spoken in the simplest English but communicating the profoundest ideas. I must have heard the phrase “scientific knowledge and development” about 5 to 7 times in this speech. He certainly did not mince his words in this and other speeches when it came to the importance of not only paying homage to the scientists, philosophers and other intellectuals during Islam’s golden period but, more importantly, of re-establishing in a hurry the absolutely fundamental Islamic principle of learning about the universe, what it is made up of, how it operates and how this knowledge can also be used to the practical benefit of Muslim societies, something which is being more than amply demonstrated by our present Imam and the institutions he heads."

The speech can be accessed by clicking on the link provided:

An excerpt of an audio speech by Aga Khan III
March 25, 2007
Posted by ismailimail in Aga Khan Family, Aga Khan III, Speech. 2 comments
Click here to launch the audio file in your media player.


Here is a list of timeless sayings by Our 48th Imam, which I posted much earlier on Ismaili Mail as well as on this blogsite. I think these sayings match the speech quoted above very well:

Timeless sayings of Aga Khan III relating to the universe in which we live, move and have our being:

1) Quote from a letter written by Our 48th Imam to a friend in 1952 under the title: “What have we forgotten in Islam?”:

Islam is fundamentally in its very nature a natural religion. Throughout the Quran God’s signs (Ayats) are referred to as the natural phenomenon, the law and order of the universe, the exactitudes and consequences of the relations between natural phenomenon in cause and effect. Over and over, the stars, sun, moon, earthquakes, fruits of the earth and trees are mentioned as the signs of divine power, divine law and divine order. Even in the Ayeh of Noor, divine is referred to as the natural phenomenon of light and even references are made to the fruit of the earth. During the great period of Islam, Muslims did not forget these principles of their religion. Alas, Islam which is a natural religion in which God’s miracles are the very law and order of nature drifted away and still drifting away, even in Pakistan, from science which is the study of those very laws and orders of nature.

……Islam is a natural religion of which the Ayats are the universe in which we live and move and have our being……

…..The God of the Quran is the one whose Ayats are the universe……

2) About Hafiz, the renowned Iranian poet:

“Then came Hafiz - by far the greatest singer of the soul of man. In him we can find all the strivings, all the sorrow, all the victories and joys, all the hopes and disappointments of each and every one of us. In him we find contact, direct and immediate, with the outer universe interpreted as an infinite reality of matter, as a mirror of an eternal spirit, or indeed (as Spinoza later said) an absolute existence of which matter and spirit alike are but two of infinite modes and facets.”

-Inaugural Lecture Before the Iran Society by Sir Sultan Muhammad Shah Aga Khan, November 9, 1936 London, United Kingdom.

3) There is a fundamental difference between the Jewish idea of creation and that of Islam. The creation according to Islam is not a unique act in a given time but a perpetual and constant event; and God supports and sustains all existence at every moment by His will and His thought. Outside His will, outside His thought, all is nothing, even the things which seem to us absolutely self-evident such as space and time. Allah alone wishes: the Universe exists; and all manifestations are as a witness of the Divine will (Memoirs of Aga Khan, 1954).

4) Islamic doctrine goes further than the other great religions, for it proclaims the presence of the soul, perhaps minute but nevertheless existing in an embryonic state, in all existence in matter, in animals, trees, and space itself. Every individual, every molecule, every atom has its own spiritual relationship with the All-Powerful Soul of God. (Memoirs of Aga Khan, 1954).

5) Thus there was an absolute need for the Divine Word’s revelation, to Mohammed himself, a man like the others, of God’s person and of his relations to the Universe which he had created. Once man has thus comprehended the essence of existence, there remains for him the duty, since he knows the absolute value of his own soul, of making for himself a direct path which will constantly lead his individual soul to and bind it with the universal Soul of which the Universe is, as much of it as we perceive with our limited visions, one of the infinite manifestations. Thus Islam’s basic principle can only be defined as mono-realism and not as monotheism. Consider, for example, the opening declaration of every Islamic prayer: “Allah-o-Akbar”. What does that mean? There can be no doubt that the second word of the declaration likens the character of Allah to a matrix which contains all and gives existence to the infinite, to space, to time, to the Universe, to all active and passive forces imaginable, to life and to the soul. Imam Hassan has explained the Islamic doctrine of God and the Universe by analogy with the sun and its reflection in the pool of a fountain; there is certainly a reflection or image of the sun, but with what poverty and with what little reality; how small and pale is the likeness between this impalpable image and the immense, blazing, white-hot glory of the celestial sphere itself. Allah is the sun; and the Universe, as we know it in all its magnitude, and time, with its power, are nothing more than the reflection of the Absolute in the mirror of the fountain (memoirs of Aga Khan, 1954).

easynash

Islam, eminently logical, placing the greatest emphasis on knowledge, purports to understand God's creation:Aga Khan 4.
The God of the Quran is the One whose Ayats(Signs) are the Universe in which we live, move and have our being:Aga Khan 3